Description

Since Ross first edited and wrote for Life Office Management Association publications and then the historic Canadian Journal of Life Insurance, his unique style of opinionated and straight to the point writing has garnered continued exposure in 38 countries. The topics ranged through management, reinsurance, underwriting, technology and general insurance insight. Each of his contributions took a unique view of the issue and formulated an article full of industry anecdotes and humorous meanderings. After numerous articles (and speeches), Ross has finally written his first book!

From the Forward to the book:

“In 1973, the National Underwriter published a small red text, smaller than a paperback but far more poignant in its simplicity. “Does it Make Sense” by Charles A. Will was a tremendous success and in that string of four words, Charlie summarized the credo of life insurance underwriting. To some the question “Does it make sense?” even summarized the whole business of decision making applicable to almost any situation.”

“Time has passed and the small red book has endured if just for its title, ‘Does It Make Sense’. The staccato style of preaching a message outlasted the textbook. The title has been the foundation for senior experienced underwriters as they mentored the countless hundreds of risk selection leaders. The problem was time, which has made some of the examples Charlie used seem outdated. There grew a small group who advocated for a new text to again teach the younger underwriter and remind the older that, regardless of all the medical data and high tech assistance, we still must ask the question again, ‘Does it make sense?’”

Additional information

Weight

445 g

Dimensions

21 x 15 x 1.5 cm

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“Ross Morton is unique. In the 20+ years I have known him, he has shown unassailable integrity, tremendous depth in his field, the ability to stand apart from the crowd when the facts support that decision , and a willingness to share with people to help them grow and become better stewards of the industry. Just knowing him makes me a better person and a better practitioner.”
— JULIAN N. WISE, TEP